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The Farm: The Story of One Family and the English Countryside

par Richard Benson

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After two hundred years of farming in Yorkshire, the Benson family were forced to sell up. They found - like so many other farmers - that big business was wiping out a way of life they had known for generations. Farming had not come naturally to Richard Benson - he had fled to London long ago. But when he returned to help, he found himself caught up in memories of his childhood in the countryside. Recalling a lost world of pigs digging up the neighbour's lawn, love affairs among haystacks and men who wrestled bulls to prove a point, he tells of othe changing English landscape, of the people affected - and how his family adapt to a new life after being forced to give up their birthright.… (plus d'informations)
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Charming story of how difficult it is for a family farm to survive in England these days. Pre-dates and comes to the same conclusions as Michael Pollan in terms of mega farming. Really well done read! ( )
  coolmama | Dec 11, 2009 |
I didn’t expect to enjoy this book as much as I did. I grew attached to the characters and loved hearing about their way of life. The passage that tells of the day the family had to auction their farm was extremely moving and I had to gulp back the tears. A terrific tale of life on a farm and all the hardship and joy that being a farming family entails. At times an extremely emotional read but also has moments of great humour. ( )
  kehs | Nov 2, 2008 |
A sentimental and sad book about uneconomic rural work and the associated way of life.
Benson implicitly takes the French line that imports should be controlled (prices raised)or government handouts (other peoples money) paid to maintain small farms and pretend that traditional skills haven't been devalued and that everything is OK. ( )
  Miro | Feb 25, 2007 |
Richard Benson grew up on a farm in the Yorkshire Wolds. His parents had just enough land to earn a living for themselves and their three children, the work was hard and long, but fairly paid in the end.

As Richard grew up he could never quite fit in on the farm, clumsy and uneasy with livestock, he became a good pupil at school and eventually went to university and became a journalist. In the time it took for Ricahrd to become his own man, life was changing for his parents and the brother that had stayed on to work with them.

The rise and rise of the supermarkets was sounding the death knell for thousands of small farmers, as meat prices plummeted and only farms working on a vast scale of production could make a profit, many smallholders found that their beasts were raising less money at auction than they had spent on feed to fatten them up.

It is this scenario that Benson describes, he comes back to the family farm where his stoic father and tearful mother expalin to him that they will have to sell the farm. It seems that the only way to secure any kind of financial future is to sell off the farm buildings for conversion into holiday or retirement homes.

This isn't a story where the prodigal son returns home and turns around the family fortunes, against the multinational seed corporations and factory scale pig farms there is almost nothing that can be done to save the farm. Instead they raise money as best they can, selling the buildings, holding a heartbreaking auction of livestock, tools and equipment.

There is redemption of a sort to be found though, Richard becomes closer to his family, especially his brother, and all is not quite doom and gloom. Theis book though makes a powerful and engaging statement about the effects the supermarkets and our own food purchasing have on people in the production chain.

A few notes from The Farm....

In 1939 there were approximately 500,000 farms in Britain, today there are about 19,000

Four companies (Tesco, Asda-Walmart, Sainsburys, Morrisons) account for about 70% of all food sales in the UK.

On average, a farmer receives about 7.5p for every £1 spent on food, fifty years ago this sum would have been nearer to 50 pence. ( )
2 voter Yorkshiresoul | Dec 9, 2006 |
4 sur 4
Benson has written a lovely book, elegiac yet full of life. His greatest achievement, however, is to render his father, a man with a working knowledge of all the nastiest pesticides, a hero of Gabriel Oak proportions.

In an age when most ordinary farmers - at least for the prissy, organic-sausage-buying middle classes - are the enemy, this is no mean feat.
ajouté par Nevov | modifierThe Observer, Rachel Cooke (May 22, 2005)
 
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After two hundred years of farming in Yorkshire, the Benson family were forced to sell up. They found - like so many other farmers - that big business was wiping out a way of life they had known for generations. Farming had not come naturally to Richard Benson - he had fled to London long ago. But when he returned to help, he found himself caught up in memories of his childhood in the countryside. Recalling a lost world of pigs digging up the neighbour's lawn, love affairs among haystacks and men who wrestled bulls to prove a point, he tells of othe changing English landscape, of the people affected - and how his family adapt to a new life after being forced to give up their birthright.

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